118 Ga. 250 | Ga. | 1903
Having cut and stacked their crop of wheat, the plaintiffs employed the defendants to thresh the grain with their portable steam thresher. The work continued till the noon hour, when all parties left the field to go to dinner, and soon thereafter the stacks were found to be in flames. This suit was brought for the value of the property destroyed. Plaintiffs insisted that the engine was defective, as it had no ash-pan or other means to prevent fire from falling on the ground, catching in the stubble, and thence spreading to the grain; that the fire had been thus caused; that they had nothing to do with the location of the machine; knew nothing of its condition, and were under no duty to guard against fire. The defendants insisted that they were not responsible for the fire; did not know how it had originated; that they exercised all reasonable care and diligence; that the engine was not defective, and if loss resulted to the plaintiffs it was without fault of the defendants. In their evidence they contend that the engine was located at a place designated by plaintiffs; that the stubble under it was burned off; that the ground was made wet
The defendants were not guarantors that no damage would be done by their engine, and they would only be held liable on proof of negligence. ■ The plaintiffs, in contracting to have this engine brought on their plantation, assumed the necessary risk which that involved, but they did not assume the risk of injury caused by its defective condition or by any negligence on the part of the defendants. Still they were bound to avoid the consequences of the defendants’ negligence if they could do so by the exercise of ordinary care; for, although the Civil Code, § 3830, by its terms, applies to personal injuries, it is also applicable to suits for damages to property. Ga. R. Co. v. Neely, 56 Ga. 544; S., F. & W. R. Co. v. Stewart, 71 Ga. 447; Miller v. Smythe, 95 Ga. 288. The principle is-the same in both classes of cases, but the details of its application are different. Where the cause of action is personal injuries,, the plaintiff as a conscious and responsible human agent must act-as the situation and ordinary care require. The great law of self-defense underlies the doctrine requiring a plaintiff to avoid danger. The word “avoid” is very broad and comprehensive, and it would be impossible to define exactly what the plaintiff shall do in any particular case. He can “ avoid ” danger by refraining from going into what he knows is an unsafe place. He can “avoid” it by going away from that which he knows or ought to know is dangerous. Or, again, he can avoid it by getting out of the way of danger
But property is inert and can not act for itself, nor does the law require the owner to be active in its protection until the danger becomes active. Both law and good morals require the plaintiff to lessen his damage (Civil Code, § 3802), and to avoid the injury altogether where it can be done by the exercise of ordinary care. But he is not bound to anticipate that some one else will be negligent or injure his property. He is not required to guard against the possible results of defendant’s act so long as it is uncertain whether that act will culminate in an injury to his property. When negligence becomes active, and a plaintiff knows it, he too must be .active to avoid consequences which he now sees and knows to be impending. But as long as the defendant’s forcéis quiescent, the plaintiff himself may remain quiescent. In the presence of a seen danger he must protect his goods, but he is not required to guard against a possible or contingent calamity. W. & A. R. Co. v. Ferguson, 113 Ga. 710.
Of course in every case, whether in suits for personal injuries or injury to property, it will be for the jury to determine whether the plaintiff as a prudent man ought to have taken steps to avoid the damage. Where the force or instrument likely to occasion injury is not in the immediate charge of the defendant, as in Miller v. Smythe, 95 Ga. 288; or where the plaintiff has better means of knowing and guarding against the impending danger than the defendant, prompter measures to avoid the danger will be required of the plaintiff than in cases where the defendant is in immediate control of that which threatens damage to the plaintiff’s person or property.
At the request of defendants’ counsel the court charged that ■“if the plaintiffs invited everyone to dinner, and the fire occurred during the dinner hour and could have been prevented by leaving some one on guard during that time, and the failure of the plaintiffs to leave some one on guard was the want of ordinary care and